273
273
Feb 19, 2013
02/13
by
CNBC
tv
eye 273
favorite 0
quote 0
. >> caller: no, for u.s. economic reconstructi reconstruction, and energy holdings recently made the largest national investment in solar at $2 billion are sety and sbwr immediate union -- >> sbwr i'm not that crazy about. solar city i have to do work on. you know, it was my birthday recently. my kids said happy birthday, you ought to get a solar panel. it's like solar circuit, like circuit -- i don't want to do that, but hoar about party city? that's not there, either. but i will tell you that i think the solar city is on to something. if you can get money to put a solar panel on and cut my electric bill, you would be plenty happy. >>> matt in texas, matt? >> hi, jim. boo-yah from austin. >> man, austin, we had such a great time when we were in austin, at u.t. it was fantastic. what's up? >> caller: hey, i'm a longtime -- despite, due to -- medicare is a small book of business, which is down over 6%. do you think you have strategy, and in particular international expansion are enough to offset -- >> no, no,
. >> caller: no, for u.s. economic reconstructi reconstruction, and energy holdings recently made the largest national investment in solar at $2 billion are sety and sbwr immediate union -- >> sbwr i'm not that crazy about. solar city i have to do work on. you know, it was my birthday recently. my kids said happy birthday, you ought to get a solar panel. it's like solar circuit, like circuit -- i don't want to do that, but hoar about party city? that's not there, either. but i will...
45
45
Feb 20, 2013
02/13
by
CNN
tv
eye 45
favorite 0
quote 0
." >>> at this hour, the u.s. supreme court has denied a stay of execution for warren lee >>> good evening, everyone. i'm erin burnett. tonight, the countdown is on again. we are now just ten days away from washington's latest deadline for forced spending cuts, otherwise known by the distinctly unsexy and misused word, sequester. today, president obama said again something must be done. >> so these cuts are not smart. they are not fair. they will hurt our economy. they will add hundreds of thousands of americans to the unemployment rolls. this is not an abstraction. people will lose their jobs. >> so there are two solutions. number one, lawmakers find another way to punt, ie, delay the cuts for another few months or two, actually come up with a major plan to slash the debt. number two is not going to happen. the punt, i kind of like. anyway, that won't happen. number one has a decent chance. number one has failed, too. after all, the feared forced cuts are only 2.5% of projected total federal spending. we have an
." >>> at this hour, the u.s. supreme court has denied a stay of execution for warren lee >>> good evening, everyone. i'm erin burnett. tonight, the countdown is on again. we are now just ten days away from washington's latest deadline for forced spending cuts, otherwise known by the distinctly unsexy and misused word, sequester. today, president obama said again something must be done. >> so these cuts are not smart. they are not fair. they will hurt our economy....
51
51
Feb 11, 2013
02/13
by
CNN
tv
eye 51
favorite 0
quote 0
. >> can you imagine u.s. marines charging onto your property an steal your guns. >> i would hope not. >> you're a sensible guy. i hear this all the time in texas. i gave an interview with a friend of yours with 40 and 50 texans. that's the one thing they agreed that tyranny was about to come their way. >> look at all the other countries. it started where we are now and it's ended up with no guns. >> you think that the american military would attack its own people? >> if they're forced to. i hope that would not happen. >> do you think that's what many texans feel about why they would need a weapon like this? >> they want it because they are law-abiding citizens and they know it's legal to purchase it now and it won't be legal now. they rather buy it now and be legal than do something illegal because these are law -abiding citizens we're talking about. >> show me the type of weapon effective for home defense? >> inside your home this is a typical shotgun. the reason i like about this is it does have a strap her
. >> can you imagine u.s. marines charging onto your property an steal your guns. >> i would hope not. >> you're a sensible guy. i hear this all the time in texas. i gave an interview with a friend of yours with 40 and 50 texans. that's the one thing they agreed that tyranny was about to come their way. >> look at all the other countries. it started where we are now and it's ended up with no guns. >> you think that the american military would attack its own people?...
157
157
Feb 26, 2013
02/13
by
CNNW
tv
eye 157
favorite 0
quote 0
rodriguez's albums flopped in the u.s. somehow, though, his first album "cold fact" made it halfway around the world and became a massive hit. >> in south africa, he was in the pantheon of rock gods. >> to us, it was one of the most famous records of all time. >> the soundtrack of the antiapartheid revolution, fueling movement. but at home in detroit, rodriguez had no idea. he had given up his music career. that was four decades ago. >> you used to play right across the street, right? >> i played at a lot of places in detroit. >> unaware of his fame abroad and getting no royalties, he lived on little. raising his daughters doing demolition work. >> i'm not a stranger to hard work. >> he made failed bids for mayor, city council, and city rep. >> you call yourself a musical political? >> yeah, i don't see how someone can't be. >> at 57, he was rediscovered by a south african music journalist when they found clues in his lyrics. they brought rodriguez to south africa, and he played to thousands of adoring fans. >> thanks for
rodriguez's albums flopped in the u.s. somehow, though, his first album "cold fact" made it halfway around the world and became a massive hit. >> in south africa, he was in the pantheon of rock gods. >> to us, it was one of the most famous records of all time. >> the soundtrack of the antiapartheid revolution, fueling movement. but at home in detroit, rodriguez had no idea. he had given up his music career. that was four decades ago. >> you used to play right...
24
24
Feb 21, 2013
02/13
by
CNBC
tv
eye 24
favorite 0
quote 0
be in u.s. . stocks provide a yield of less than 2%, which historically is towards the low end of the long-term historical range. sure it's a lot better than it was 12 years ago but it's pretty anemic. secondly, profits are a larger share of gdp than they've been any time historically since 1929 and wages are the lowest share of gdp since 1937. so put those together and rising earnings from these levels would be a formula for occupy wall street to suddenly become a mainstream movement. >> what's the trade right now? you brought some heat, right, with your thoughts to get out of u.s. stocks, then shine some light on people. to be?o they need >> sure, sure. there's always something invest in. to faced what i call a 3d deficits down? ef mer emerging markets debt has better debt coverage ratios and yet they pay a much higher yield. yield 70 basis points more than u.s. stocks. in an efficient market that would mean their growth rate must be 70 basis points slower. well, i don't think that's going to ha
be in u.s. . stocks provide a yield of less than 2%, which historically is towards the low end of the long-term historical range. sure it's a lot better than it was 12 years ago but it's pretty anemic. secondly, profits are a larger share of gdp than they've been any time historically since 1929 and wages are the lowest share of gdp since 1937. so put those together and rising earnings from these levels would be a formula for occupy wall street to suddenly become a mainstream movement. >>...
146
146
Feb 27, 2013
02/13
by
CNBC
tv
eye 146
favorite 0
quote 0
that there simply are no good alternatives around the world to u.s. multinationals that pay dividends, have returns and are growing globally. stocks simply put are the best game in
that there simply are no good alternatives around the world to u.s. multinationals that pay dividends, have returns and are growing globally. stocks simply put are the best game in
33
33
Feb 23, 2013
02/13
by
CNN
tv
eye 33
favorite 0
quote 0
it really is not that much different than the u.s. law in terms of the degrees of homicide. >> and very quickly because we're almost out of time. isn't it it common sense he would yell before he would shoot? whoever is in that bathroom, i'm going to shoot? isn't that common sense. >> i will answer that yes. go ahead and make up something. >> here i am, why don't you shoot first? this is somebody who has just been waken out of bed. his life has had to overcome adversity. this is somebody who has somebody he loves very much there and wants to take care of her and he's panicked and he has violence done to him in the past. i don't know that it's that crazy as what the prosecution's theory is. >> i mean, come on. >> there's no jury and the judge today said he can't be so sure. >> i think you've made a good case. jeffrey toobin and mark geragos, thank you so much. mark is co-author of "mistrial." we're far from through with this story because there's so much interest. we're devoting a full hour to it. "anderson cooper 360," blade runner, mu
it really is not that much different than the u.s. law in terms of the degrees of homicide. >> and very quickly because we're almost out of time. isn't it it common sense he would yell before he would shoot? whoever is in that bathroom, i'm going to shoot? isn't that common sense. >> i will answer that yes. go ahead and make up something. >> here i am, why don't you shoot first? this is somebody who has just been waken out of bed. his life has had to overcome adversity. this...
169
169
Feb 4, 2013
02/13
by
CNBC
tv
eye 169
favorite 0
quote 0
s&p has gotten ahead of the u.s. government by putting out its own press release saying it would be without factual or legal merit for the doj to sue. as we previously also reported, there were at least -- there was a desire on the part of the doj to get at least a billion dollar settlement and admission of guilt from s&p to drop the charges. s&p said no thank you. it would be a long time until we go to court, but this is an interesting potential case and certainly an important news story that is having significant pressure on both mcgraw-hill stock price and interestingly on that of moody's despite according to our sources there does not seem to be a case mounted against moody's president . at least at this point. >> selling off just in case though. >> absolutely. we're looking at the stock markets reaction. stay right there. we want to get reaction from brian belski and bob pisani. what about this? when you see a move like this in these stocks while we're waiting. what do you want to do? >> first off it was five ye
s&p has gotten ahead of the u.s. government by putting out its own press release saying it would be without factual or legal merit for the doj to sue. as we previously also reported, there were at least -- there was a desire on the part of the doj to get at least a billion dollar settlement and admission of guilt from s&p to drop the charges. s&p said no thank you. it would be a long time until we go to court, but this is an interesting potential case and certainly an important news...
190
190
Feb 27, 2013
02/13
by
CNBC
tv
eye 190
favorite 0
quote 0
you know, the u.s. treasury is still a safe haven, even though debt is out of hand. rates are still going to be between a percent and a half and 2%, but in terms of growth, it is -- it is the large-cap u.s. stock market. there's no question about that. >> that's what you would sell? >> no, that's where i would go in terms of do i want growth? i would go there but i'd be very cautious. what i would sell is i'd be look at more of my risky assets. i look at mortgage-backed assets and high-yield assets, potentially looking overseas. >> but if we get a bull market, high yield is up today. look at all the high yield etf funds. they are all up today. i want to go back to the question. what would get us a sustained bull market and you laughed at me when i mentioned clarification from washington, but i think the important thing is if we get some kind of deal on deficit reduction, that's going to be a major point. >> a great point. >> thank you gentlemen. appreciate your time. >> right back with the closing countdown. >> yeah, we are. just six minutes away from the bell and bl
you know, the u.s. treasury is still a safe haven, even though debt is out of hand. rates are still going to be between a percent and a half and 2%, but in terms of growth, it is -- it is the large-cap u.s. stock market. there's no question about that. >> that's what you would sell? >> no, that's where i would go in terms of do i want growth? i would go there but i'd be very cautious. what i would sell is i'd be look at more of my risky assets. i look at mortgage-backed assets and...
131
131
Feb 23, 2013
02/13
by
CNN
tv
eye 131
favorite 0
quote 0
right now the u.s. government uses taxes to take money from people who got more of it and put it in the hands of people who have less of it so more people spend, thereby fuelling the economy. people with lower incomes tend to spend any incremental money they get in a manner that is more beneficial to the economy than rich people do. that's a fact. in the short term, it's economically sensible to put money in the hands of less wealthy americans, but with a structurally weak economy, with an aging population, and when we can't create enough jobs for people who need them, more and more money is being transferred from the rich to the poor. it's gone from millions of dollars to trillions of dollars in the last 50 years. the government is spendingless a less and less of its income, your money, on so-called investments and more on transfer payments for consumption. what if we turned the clock back somehow to a time when most tax dollars went toward investment, things like infrastructure, education, and researc
right now the u.s. government uses taxes to take money from people who got more of it and put it in the hands of people who have less of it so more people spend, thereby fuelling the economy. people with lower incomes tend to spend any incremental money they get in a manner that is more beneficial to the economy than rich people do. that's a fact. in the short term, it's economically sensible to put money in the hands of less wealthy americans, but with a structurally weak economy, with an...
108
108
Feb 11, 2013
02/13
by
CNBC
tv
eye 108
favorite 0
quote 0
u.s. companies tend to do really well as long as the u.s. currency continues to be cheaper. >> all right. thank you, guys. good to see you both. thanks for joining us today. appreciate it very much. >>> up next, "the new york times" now responding to elon musk about his claim that the newspaper's test drive of a new high-end electric tesla was bogus. phil lebeau will have the latest on that. >>> then the threat of massive spending cuts hanging over the market, coming up i'll talk to gene sperling from the white house today. they want more revenue. representative tom cole says more taxes are off the table. is there any hope of a compromise to be reached? back in a moment. , , you should know that axiron is here. the only underarm treatment for low t. that's right, the one you apply to the underarm. axiron is not for use in women or anyone younger than 18. axiron can transfer to others through direct contact. women, especially those who are or who may become pregnant, and children should avoid contact where axiron is applied as unexpected sign
u.s. companies tend to do really well as long as the u.s. currency continues to be cheaper. >> all right. thank you, guys. good to see you both. thanks for joining us today. appreciate it very much. >>> up next, "the new york times" now responding to elon musk about his claim that the newspaper's test drive of a new high-end electric tesla was bogus. phil lebeau will have the latest on that. >>> then the threat of massive spending cuts hanging over the market,...
101
101
Feb 6, 2013
02/13
by
CNBC
tv
eye 101
favorite 0
quote 0
so, a harty congratulations goes out tonight to the u.s. postal service, whiches is trying to keep up with the times in the 21st century and the age of the internet. much has been said about the news today that the post office plans to eliminate letter deliveries on saturdays. that move estimates to save some $2 billion a year. it's a start. but let's not forget that last year, the post office lost $16 billion. i understand the reaction is mixed on this. many people will be inconvenienced without mail on saturday. but any kind of kuchlts will, of course, inconvenience some. but the troubling aspect of all of this is who some of the loudest nay sayers of this move are. name little our lawmakers. sadly, this is the one lawmaker where there seems to be support. republican senator susan collins saying cuts services should be a last resort. democratic snoshg mark begich says it was a bad news. these are, of course, the same people who need to get serious about government spending, before america has a true crisis. what the post office is doing i
so, a harty congratulations goes out tonight to the u.s. postal service, whiches is trying to keep up with the times in the 21st century and the age of the internet. much has been said about the news today that the post office plans to eliminate letter deliveries on saturdays. that move estimates to save some $2 billion a year. it's a start. but let's not forget that last year, the post office lost $16 billion. i understand the reaction is mixed on this. many people will be inconvenienced...
52
52
Feb 15, 2013
02/13
by
CNN
tv
eye 52
favorite 0
quote 0
they don't have to abide by u.s. labor laws. they don't have to abide by u.s. minimum wage. they have limited liabilities when it comes to their crew. they're going to give vacation early to crew near the end of their contract, and for those in the middle they're going to assign them to their ships. two things they didn't have to do. i'm wobderring whether you think they did a good job. >> i'll tell you my big problem with that, that was the vice president. where's the ceo. when you're disaster control, and this is something that's affected a lot of people. why is the head guy not there saying i'm in control, so to put the vice president of marketing out there, that's not the way i would tell people to do it. cl eo should be on the ground. i think they missed a very big opportunity there. >> yeah, i know -- jerry cahill, we've been waiting for him -- on the ground, we were hopeful he would be at this press conference, we haven't seen him. i can tell you, he's here. i know you have a great panel with you, right? >> yeah, erin, i'm here, we have a great panel here at new york
they don't have to abide by u.s. labor laws. they don't have to abide by u.s. minimum wage. they have limited liabilities when it comes to their crew. they're going to give vacation early to crew near the end of their contract, and for those in the middle they're going to assign them to their ships. two things they didn't have to do. i'm wobderring whether you think they did a good job. >> i'll tell you my big problem with that, that was the vice president. where's the ceo. when you're...
99
99
Feb 4, 2013
02/13
by
CNBC
tv
eye 99
favorite 0
quote 0
about one-week yield in the u.s. in germany. if you look at uk, guilt, you can see hovering around 208, it is lower. as the flight to safety seems to have gotten renewed as yields in spain and italy reflect economies. if you look at the etf for munis, also getting life as high tide and fixed income floating all boats. for an exchange quickly, the euro dollar or euro yen, we have come off. about friday this time, trading with 137 handle. 135 and last, tyler, it is all yours. >> rick, thank you very much. our power play is ceo and founder of williams capital group, christopher williams. also sits on the boards of wal-mart, caesars entertainment, dartmouth school of business. you're a busy man, chris. >> nice to see you again. >> let's talk about the fixed income, we were just talking off camera about how large companies that have access to capital markets are coming into the debt markets because in part rates are so low. do you expect there to be a continued crush into the debt markets on the theory that we better get in now befor
about one-week yield in the u.s. in germany. if you look at uk, guilt, you can see hovering around 208, it is lower. as the flight to safety seems to have gotten renewed as yields in spain and italy reflect economies. if you look at the etf for munis, also getting life as high tide and fixed income floating all boats. for an exchange quickly, the euro dollar or euro yen, we have come off. about friday this time, trading with 137 handle. 135 and last, tyler, it is all yours. >> rick, thank...
218
218
Feb 21, 2013
02/13
by
CNBC
tv
eye 218
favorite 0
quote 0
the discretionary part of the u.s. budge set skewed toward military spending and even though the iraq war is over and afghanistan is winding down, the defense department has not turned its back. judging by what they plan on going after in order to do so, 800,000 civilian jobs instead of huge overhead meant to fight the soviet union, japan and, germany, no matter that my old pal and partner, larry kudlow has a terrific piece on cnbc.com today, which points out the entire harm from the sequester this year might come to $44 million, and that's just a quarter of 1% of our gdp. my worries is that the fed will take notice and not do the wrong thing if we go over the sequestration cliff. we thank the conclusion of the payroll tax holiday, and the rising gas prices are weighing on the consumer. does d the fed see that this coming last month when things were rosier. is this when they bail on plans to help the economy and start hurting it? the fed chief is sticking by 6.5% unemployment goal. that's still a percent before the gre
the discretionary part of the u.s. budge set skewed toward military spending and even though the iraq war is over and afghanistan is winding down, the defense department has not turned its back. judging by what they plan on going after in order to do so, 800,000 civilian jobs instead of huge overhead meant to fight the soviet union, japan and, germany, no matter that my old pal and partner, larry kudlow has a terrific piece on cnbc.com today, which points out the entire harm from the sequester...
131
131
Feb 28, 2013
02/13
by
MSNBCW
tv
eye 131
favorite 0
quote 0
i was talking a couple of weeks ago to an important bishop here in the u.s. who made the same alan judging who said we, the catholic church -- we in the catholic church have to think about the extent to which we are growing out of touch with some of our membership. we have to be open to reform. having said that, i think when you look at the very nature of the college of cardinals, i mean, this is in the technical sense of the term a kind of self-perpetuating leadership. virtually all these cardinals who are picked either by pope benedict or by pope john paul, i believe, somebody correct me if i'm wrong, the average age is somewhere in the 70s, low 70s. there aren't if to really drive your metaphor into the ground, a lot of blue state sort of cardinals in that list, and so there are not a lot of obviously progressive candidates on the list of potential popes. i don't think progressive conservative, however, is the right optic. i think the real question is when you get someone elected who actually is open to change and dialogue on some of these issues, on the a
i was talking a couple of weeks ago to an important bishop here in the u.s. who made the same alan judging who said we, the catholic church -- we in the catholic church have to think about the extent to which we are growing out of touch with some of our membership. we have to be open to reform. having said that, i think when you look at the very nature of the college of cardinals, i mean, this is in the technical sense of the term a kind of self-perpetuating leadership. virtually all these...
37
37
Feb 22, 2013
02/13
by
CNN
tv
eye 37
favorite 0
quote 0
public records show ceos of top billing hospitals across the u.s. can garner salaries, deferred compensation and other revenues that rival ceos of major for-profit businesses. take a look at this list put together by a health care journal's review of 2010 and 2011 tax filings, which showed ceos of top grossing nonprofit hospitals making multimillion dollar figures. watch as the numbers get bigger. the top salary paid in 2010? dean harrison, chief administrator of the prestigious northwestern memorial hospital in chicago. his salary and one-time bonus earned him a whopping 9$9.7 million. when we asked about the high salaries and high hospital bills, the american hospital association sent to us taylor, michigan and to malcon henoch at oakwood health care system. even he didn't want to talk about hospital health care executive salaries. he was willing to discuss hospital billing. here the hospital says it tries to work with patients, to understand their bills. >> the information we provide is not perfect. it doesn't disclose everything. and it's not fo
public records show ceos of top billing hospitals across the u.s. can garner salaries, deferred compensation and other revenues that rival ceos of major for-profit businesses. take a look at this list put together by a health care journal's review of 2010 and 2011 tax filings, which showed ceos of top grossing nonprofit hospitals making multimillion dollar figures. watch as the numbers get bigger. the top salary paid in 2010? dean harrison, chief administrator of the prestigious northwestern...
188
188
Feb 23, 2013
02/13
by
KNTV
tv
eye 188
favorite 0
quote 0
. >>> also tonight, did the u.s. marine corps abandon a group of marines and military family members after they developed a rare and surprising disease? dr. nancy snyderman investigates a controversy. >> when is the leadership of the marine corps going to stand up and say we made a mistake? >>> also tonight, kate snow goes inside the fight to save the pandas including some of the very youngest. >> you are too cute. look at you. >> their ircystability is beyond dispute, so what is it about the effort to protect them that makes this wild life expert so upset. >> you said once i would happily eat the last panda on earth if you could spend the money on worth while. in all seriousness, why did you say that? >> "rock center" gets under way. good evening. welcome to "rock center." the first glimpse americans ever got of oscar pistorius was on this broadcast in the run-up to the summer olympic games in london. we aired what became the defining profile of him reported by mary carrillo of nbc sports who traveled to south afric
. >>> also tonight, did the u.s. marine corps abandon a group of marines and military family members after they developed a rare and surprising disease? dr. nancy snyderman investigates a controversy. >> when is the leadership of the marine corps going to stand up and say we made a mistake? >>> also tonight, kate snow goes inside the fight to save the pandas including some of the very youngest. >> you are too cute. look at you. >> their ircystability is...
95
95
Feb 24, 2013
02/13
by
WBAL
tv
eye 95
favorite 0
quote 0
the u.s. postal service®, no business too small. well, technically i wear one. the people of bp made a commitment to the gulf., and every day since, we've worked hard to keep it. today, the beaches and gulf are open for everyone to enjoy. we've shared what we've learned, so we can all produce energy more safely. bp's also committed to america. we support nearly two-hundred-fifty thousand jobs and invest more here than anywhere else. we're working to fuel america for generations to come. our commitment has never been stronger. i've always had to keep my eye on her... but, i didn't always watch out for myself. with so much noise about health care... i tuned it all out. with unitedhealthcare, i get information that matters... my individual health profile. not random statistics. they even reward me for addressing my health risks. so i'm doing fine... but she's still going to give me a heart attack. we're more than 78,000 people looking out for more than 70 million americans. that's health in numbers. unitedhealthcare. thank you all very much for the discussion. i ap
the u.s. postal service®, no business too small. well, technically i wear one. the people of bp made a commitment to the gulf., and every day since, we've worked hard to keep it. today, the beaches and gulf are open for everyone to enjoy. we've shared what we've learned, so we can all produce energy more safely. bp's also committed to america. we support nearly two-hundred-fifty thousand jobs and invest more here than anywhere else. we're working to fuel america for generations to come. our...
146
146
Feb 21, 2013
02/13
by
CNBC
tv
eye 146
favorite 0
quote 0
the u.s. doing okay. again, hewlett-packard better than anticipated. >> all right, david, thank you. stay right there. we're going to bring in david garrity and roger kay of end point technologies associates. good to see everybody. thanks for joining us. want to point out aig numbers are also out, and i want to tell our viewers that there is stock to buy in aig after the close tonight. just spoke with the market-maker there, so we're watching that story as well as this story. hewlett-packard though is the focus right now. david garrity, what's your take on the quarter? >> the earnings multiple for the company, single digits, a five handle. i mean, here's a company. it's great and wonderful that they are doing better in terms of businesses that are losing share in the overall computing market, and it's thighs to see that they are getting some positive margin surprises, but the fact of the matter is hewlett-packard was initially thought to be an innovator and what we see out of corner, fine, we
the u.s. doing okay. again, hewlett-packard better than anticipated. >> all right, david, thank you. stay right there. we're going to bring in david garrity and roger kay of end point technologies associates. good to see everybody. thanks for joining us. want to point out aig numbers are also out, and i want to tell our viewers that there is stock to buy in aig after the close tonight. just spoke with the market-maker there, so we're watching that story as well as this story....
40
40
Feb 11, 2013
02/13
by
CNBC
tv
eye 40
favorite 0
quote 0
it is in the u.s. coupled on the fact that carrier subdies are much lower typically abroad, as well. so, we think apple needs to bring in a half price phone, a $300 wholesale phone for the international markets and if they can do it and it's an be interesting form factor, that could accelerate earnings. until then, it's going to be difficult for them. >> brian, can we say good-bye for good to the days where apple was, in fact, a growth stock and had the high rates of growth? is that completely a thing of the past, now that it's sharing its shareholder base? this doesn't sound like the apple of the days of yore, so, maybe $700, we won't see that for a long time? >> it brings a tear to my eye to say so, but i think that's correct, yeah. ultimately, you know, always the first question, or, if you go back to a marketing meeting with an investor a year or two ago, first question, apple. it's typically about, what's the product look like, what's going on? apple has underperformed the s&p 500 by 1500 basis po
it is in the u.s. coupled on the fact that carrier subdies are much lower typically abroad, as well. so, we think apple needs to bring in a half price phone, a $300 wholesale phone for the international markets and if they can do it and it's an be interesting form factor, that could accelerate earnings. until then, it's going to be difficult for them. >> brian, can we say good-bye for good to the days where apple was, in fact, a growth stock and had the high rates of growth? is that...
563
563
Feb 25, 2013
02/13
by
CNBC
tv
eye 563
favorite 0
quote 0
and how europe and the u.s. and asia per seceive the italian economy and how serious they are to sticking to a budget and taking debt seriously is really important to their credit rating. after this four-way election turned into this kind of chaotic result here today, we saw the italian bond drop. those yields started higher. markets are answering that question for us. it's really important. >> and in fact, as we sit here, gentlemen and sue and michelle, they're going back to the lows of the day. the dow was down 107. now we're down 106.5 points. there are some traders here at the big board who have been saying to us italy's not that big a deal for these markets. and you called this an excuse for the markets to see a selloff. what are you going to do here? >> they should sell off. the markets rallied too much. they need a reason to sell off. they have to grab something. but italy is a big deal in the moral hazard that is created if italy doesn't do the right thing and shrink government spending. they can't try t
and how europe and the u.s. and asia per seceive the italian economy and how serious they are to sticking to a budget and taking debt seriously is really important to their credit rating. after this four-way election turned into this kind of chaotic result here today, we saw the italian bond drop. those yields started higher. markets are answering that question for us. it's really important. >> and in fact, as we sit here, gentlemen and sue and michelle, they're going back to the lows of...
165
165
Feb 22, 2013
02/13
by
CNBC
tv
eye 165
favorite 0
quote 0
csc has exposure to u.s. government spending in europe, two areas that are not looking so hot to me. dell has to too and dell decided to go private. but the stock csc has run up 18 for the year. so david, you felt like you m s missed it and you didn't. at these levels i'd take some profits and see how the management does in 2013. thank you for bringing this to our attention. again, you were late. nicholas from florida asked me about bloomen brands, blmn. i told him i wanted to compare it to the other small restaurant chains of how they're dealing with commodity costs before opining about the stock. bloomen is the company behind outback steakhouse, crabba's italian grill and bone fish grill, roy ws a total of more than 1,400 restaurant they either own or franchise. the average check at these places just over 20 bucks. so while it's not what you call fancy, bloom zen still at the higher end of the casual dining space versus, say, olive garden or red lobster. he with like the company's been able to meet expectat
csc has exposure to u.s. government spending in europe, two areas that are not looking so hot to me. dell has to too and dell decided to go private. but the stock csc has run up 18 for the year. so david, you felt like you m s missed it and you didn't. at these levels i'd take some profits and see how the management does in 2013. thank you for bringing this to our attention. again, you were late. nicholas from florida asked me about bloomen brands, blmn. i told him i wanted to compare it to the...
128
128
Feb 20, 2013
02/13
by
CNNW
tv
eye 128
favorite 0
quote 0
we have breaking news as we continue to the u.s. supreme court has denied the -- the u.s. supreme court denied a stay of execution. warren lee hill has received a stay of execution from a federal appeals court. as i indicated t supreme court said they weren't going to hear this but it was the federal appeals court which decided at the last moment that they would put a stay of execution on warren lee hill. he was set to be executed at 7:00 eastern time by lethal injection. he has an iq of 70 and his lawyers had argued that that meant he should be deemed mentally disabled and spared under a 2002 supreme court decision that bars the execution of mentally disabled inmates. obviously we don't know the exact reason for this stay of execution from the federal appeals court, but they have given him a stay. >>> we have more breaking news. we are continuing to monitor a massive gas explosion in kansas city. our affiliate kshb is reporting a car hit a gas line, sparking the fire. we now know what caused it. five people have been injured. in case you're familiar with the area, we're t
we have breaking news as we continue to the u.s. supreme court has denied the -- the u.s. supreme court denied a stay of execution. warren lee hill has received a stay of execution from a federal appeals court. as i indicated t supreme court said they weren't going to hear this but it was the federal appeals court which decided at the last moment that they would put a stay of execution on warren lee hill. he was set to be executed at 7:00 eastern time by lethal injection. he has an iq of 70 and...
62
62
Feb 26, 2013
02/13
by
CNBC
tv
eye 62
favorite 0
quote 0
from a u.s. investors perspective all that matters is stream of stock flows under lying stock price. what happened in italy doesn't kneesly in the short-term or long-term impact that stream. >> you think the path of least resistance for u.s. markets is still up then. >> this is something, one of the smartest guys in our office, we've been talking about this for several days. certainly feels like there's a bias for higher prices. we're looking at a number of internal indicators. some we've talked about on air in the past that suggest for the immediate future the path is probably sideways at best if not lower. >> i would also like to ask about currency, louise. what do you think the implications are for the euro. whas bad for euro means a strong dollar. a strong dollar can in its turn wreak havoc in certain sectors of the u.s. economy. >> absolutely. you've seen the euro fall like a stone, as we got the italian election results came out. you literally watched it fall from buying $1.33 preelection r
from a u.s. investors perspective all that matters is stream of stock flows under lying stock price. what happened in italy doesn't kneesly in the short-term or long-term impact that stream. >> you think the path of least resistance for u.s. markets is still up then. >> this is something, one of the smartest guys in our office, we've been talking about this for several days. certainly feels like there's a bias for higher prices. we're looking at a number of internal indicators. some...
50
50
Feb 26, 2013
02/13
by
CNN
tv
eye 50
favorite 0
quote 0
. >> you lie to them, it's a violation of the u.s. code, usually a felony in any other jurisdiction. people have this idea that somehow they're going to talk their way out of it. you can't stop it. >> usually they don't lie as extravagantly as she did. this was off the charts. but you know, who is to say the jury isn't buying it? come on. i just don't know. >> what i can't figure out, the only mystery to me is why cable tv hasn't become fixated on it. >> you don't think they have? >> we're on cable tv right now. >> i want to tell you, it hasn't been wall to wall. >> this is pretty much the first time we have done it, but hln, they've been doing it. >> they need it. >> fascinating stuff. thank you very much. >>> just ahead, we'll update you on the breaking news, the blizzard pummeling texas and oklahoma. already smashed records. look at the images. chad meyers joins us with the latest on the storm's path. stin, use doctor recommended gaviscon®. only gaviscon® forms a protective barrier that helps block stomach acid from splashing up-
. >> you lie to them, it's a violation of the u.s. code, usually a felony in any other jurisdiction. people have this idea that somehow they're going to talk their way out of it. you can't stop it. >> usually they don't lie as extravagantly as she did. this was off the charts. but you know, who is to say the jury isn't buying it? come on. i just don't know. >> what i can't figure out, the only mystery to me is why cable tv hasn't become fixated on it. >> you don't think...
75
75
Feb 25, 2013
02/13
by
CNN
tv
eye 75
favorite 0
quote 0
i got it. >> reporter: drug runners caught in the u.s. and then racing back to mexico. >> coming up to the river. >> reporter: their stolen vehicles being hurled full speed into the rio grande. >> oh, my god. right there. >> reporter: at first, law enforcement believed these were desperate attempts to escape. then they began to hear radio traffic. coordinates. >> right there. oh-oh! >> in the water. >> that's a recovery team. >> just a recovery team? recovery team right there. >> reporter: the cartels even began organizing search and rescue teams and suddenly the videos made sense. drug smugglers hurling their stolen vehicles back into the rio grande were doing it for one reason. to protect their dope at all costs. >> oh, we had a splash down. a splashdown. en route. >> they don't mind losing the truck into the river. at the end of the day if they can recover 2,000 pounds of narcotics, it's got an estimated street value between $600,000 and $800,000, that's what they are going to do, protect that inventory. >> it's going under. >> reporte
i got it. >> reporter: drug runners caught in the u.s. and then racing back to mexico. >> coming up to the river. >> reporter: their stolen vehicles being hurled full speed into the rio grande. >> oh, my god. right there. >> reporter: at first, law enforcement believed these were desperate attempts to escape. then they began to hear radio traffic. coordinates. >> right there. oh-oh! >> in the water. >> that's a recovery team. >> just a...
91
91
Feb 19, 2013
02/13
by
CNBC
tv
eye 91
favorite 0
quote 0
you couple that with the pain at the pump, and not a pretty picture for the u.s. consumer at this point. >> i'm not going to go the consumer route. we've been talking about the refiner trades. look at psx. in the 40s, we said it is probably going to trade its name sake, 66, and here we are north of 65. they don't seem to want to stop right now. >> i think, last time oil was at $100, i thought we hit $4 a gallon already, i can't understand, one of you guys knows the answer, why is it that gas, maybe the premise is wrong, but why is it that gas seems cheaper now with $100 oil? >> less taxes -- there's a spread, capacity inputs. not as simple as -- >> if you had the same inf infrastructure -- >> not all runs, you know, at capacity, at the same time. >> there's been a lot of shutdowns and the refining capacity is exactly what the difference is. the trade that i just want to point out that you should never be making here is the ung. if you look at the year of year basis, nat gas is up, ung is down. these things are supposed to be tethered. be really careful. names like
you couple that with the pain at the pump, and not a pretty picture for the u.s. consumer at this point. >> i'm not going to go the consumer route. we've been talking about the refiner trades. look at psx. in the 40s, we said it is probably going to trade its name sake, 66, and here we are north of 65. they don't seem to want to stop right now. >> i think, last time oil was at $100, i thought we hit $4 a gallon already, i can't understand, one of you guys knows the answer, why is it...
101
101
Feb 16, 2013
02/13
by
LINKTV
tv
eye 101
favorite 0
quote 0
a downgrade by the u.s. grading agency can be bad news for any business but now moody's has downgraded one of its biggest rival. one of the largest rating agency, standard and poor's it present it was most recent award with the department of justice associated with the housing collapse. >> and a meat processing splant suspected of mixing horse products in products sold with meat. they are removing products that were falsely labeled with let. >> brussels has given the go ahead for a testing of made products. >> when it's served up, consumers cannot easily distinguish between horse meat and beef. horse meat has been found in a number of places including school lunches. scale of the problem. >> i welcome the european's decision to introduce screening so we can determine if this is an isolated different or if hey are spreading worldwide, consumers were duped on horse neat more than 10 countries. falsely-labeled meat didn't just show up in lasagna it was also found in ravioli and grew losh. german authorities wer
a downgrade by the u.s. grading agency can be bad news for any business but now moody's has downgraded one of its biggest rival. one of the largest rating agency, standard and poor's it present it was most recent award with the department of justice associated with the housing collapse. >> and a meat processing splant suspected of mixing horse products in products sold with meat. they are removing products that were falsely labeled with let. >> brussels has given the go ahead for a...
61
61
Feb 20, 2013
02/13
by
CNBC
tv
eye 61
favorite 0
quote 0
the bank is selling $4.5 billion in u.s. bonds, marking its largest u.s. debt offering in two years. karen? >> i actually would hold 'em, being prepared for a bumpy ride. >> hold 'em! >> okay. >> that is another great sound effect. >> really distracting. >> next up, wendy's trading at a four-year high. recent improvements in a new menu. barron's looked at them as a possible takeout target. dan? >> there's new money in there. four-year highs. the thing is up 20% this year alone. only expected to grow sales 4% a year. trades at 30 times, 2013 earnings at a huge premium to its peers. but again, on the fundamentals alone, i'm not sure you buy this stock at four-year highs. if you are one of these people who like to put -- >> tradedown thing? they don't go to the casual restaurants, they're going to go down and have a frosty -- >> these guys are exposed to north america and what we've seen from kfc and we've seen -- these guys are having a tough time right now in the u.s., you know, so, to me, you wait for a pull-back on this one. >> can i -- i have a question.
the bank is selling $4.5 billion in u.s. bonds, marking its largest u.s. debt offering in two years. karen? >> i actually would hold 'em, being prepared for a bumpy ride. >> hold 'em! >> okay. >> that is another great sound effect. >> really distracting. >> next up, wendy's trading at a four-year high. recent improvements in a new menu. barron's looked at them as a possible takeout target. dan? >> there's new money in there. four-year highs. the thing...
131
131
Feb 26, 2013
02/13
by
MSNBCW
tv
eye 131
favorite 0
quote 0
the court threw out an attempt by u.s. citizens to challenge a recent expansion to the government's wiretap program under the foreign surveillance act. pete williams joins us live. pete, the lawsuit of journalists, lawyers and civil rights including amnesty international as a part of this. what else can you tell me? >> reporter: right. those are people who said that we talked to the kinds of people we believe would be targeted under this program. you may remember it started in the bush administration and became known as the terrorist surveillance program and it was eventually approved by congress and the government said what we're going to do is listen to people overseas we think might be terrorists or hanging out with terrorists or talking to thrifts and these folks that sued said, well, they're our clients and talk to them as the matter of business and fear that the government's probably listening in and we're harmed by this. we have to take steps to avoid being intercepted. we have to go overseas now and stop talking to
the court threw out an attempt by u.s. citizens to challenge a recent expansion to the government's wiretap program under the foreign surveillance act. pete williams joins us live. pete, the lawsuit of journalists, lawyers and civil rights including amnesty international as a part of this. what else can you tell me? >> reporter: right. those are people who said that we talked to the kinds of people we believe would be targeted under this program. you may remember it started in the bush...
69
69
Feb 8, 2013
02/13
by
FOXNEWS
tv
eye 69
favorite 0
quote 0
the u.s. has discovered so much energy than it thought it had. some talk about north american energy independence. >> we could make opec n0pec. the reason, advances in technology such as fracking, horizohorizontal drilling and or improvements which increase natural gas production by 27% in just four years, making the u.s. number one in gas with oil on its way. >> we're talking decades, if not into the hundreds of years of supply in north america. >> it's been estimated by the energy information agency that we could be the number one oil producer in the world by 2020, surpassing saudi arabia, so this is a big deal. it's a game-changing opportunity, and it's of historic proportions. >> reporter: even though who share the administration desire to reduce the use the petro chemicals acknowledge projections that the u.s. will produce one-third more of its own oil by 2020. 1 analyst said self reliance must include alternatives such as wind, solar, and more. >> we can reduce our dependence on foreign
the u.s. has discovered so much energy than it thought it had. some talk about north american energy independence. >> we could make opec n0pec. the reason, advances in technology such as fracking, horizohorizontal drilling and or improvements which increase natural gas production by 27% in just four years, making the u.s. number one in gas with oil on its way. >> we're talking decades, if not into the hundreds of years of supply in north america. >> it's been estimated by the...
58
58
Feb 14, 2013
02/13
by
CNBC
tv
eye 58
favorite 0
quote 0
but here in the u.s., keeps working. and it's boring and clearly there's more cash to be put to work. >> it is boring. one thing that's not working right now is technology. and this is a sector i'm focused on. >> your top trade. >> yeah, my top trade. listen, this is hard-picking tops here, people, right? but at the end of the day, we have a lot of the super sectors in the s&p up 8-plus percent. look at the xlk, etf up 13%. no leadership here. i believe we're going to roll over pretty soon. i think we'll need a 5% sell off. i think tech -- >> is google working? >> google is one of the big ones that is working. >> and that's the one. if you look at amazon, look at apple. one takes it right from amazon, goes into apple or vice versa. and if you look at google, they're the recipient of all the money flow. >> yeah. >> no doubt. listen, there's very few things working well in technology. if you look at ibm a great example of a company th that beat -- filling the earnings. >> there ways to express a negative outlook on technol
but here in the u.s., keeps working. and it's boring and clearly there's more cash to be put to work. >> it is boring. one thing that's not working right now is technology. and this is a sector i'm focused on. >> your top trade. >> yeah, my top trade. listen, this is hard-picking tops here, people, right? but at the end of the day, we have a lot of the super sectors in the s&p up 8-plus percent. look at the xlk, etf up 13%. no leadership here. i believe we're going to roll...
93
93
Feb 26, 2013
02/13
by
CNN
tv
eye 93
favorite 0
quote 0
rodriguez albums flopped in the u.s. somehow, though, his first album, cold fact, made it halfway around the world and became a massive hit. >> in south africa he was in the rock god. >> to us it was one of the most famous records of all time. >> the sound track of the antiapartheid movement fueling a revolution. ♪ >> at home in detroit rodriguez had no idea he had given up his music career and that was four decades ago. >> you used to play across the street there, right? >> i played a lot of places in detroit. >> unaware of his fame abroad and getting no royalties, rodriguez lived on little, raising his daughters doing demolition work. >> i am not a strange to her hard work. >> he made failed bids for mayor, city council, and state rep. >> you call yourself a musical political. >> musical political, yeah. i don't see how anyone can't be and is not political. >> at 57 he was rediscovered by a south african music journalist and a record store owner who found clues in his lyrics. >> we found them. >> they brought rodrigu
rodriguez albums flopped in the u.s. somehow, though, his first album, cold fact, made it halfway around the world and became a massive hit. >> in south africa he was in the rock god. >> to us it was one of the most famous records of all time. >> the sound track of the antiapartheid movement fueling a revolution. ♪ >> at home in detroit rodriguez had no idea he had given up his music career and that was four decades ago. >> you used to play across the street...
64
64
Feb 22, 2013
02/13
by
CNBC
tv
eye 64
favorite 0
quote 0
how big a risk is it for the u.s. in 2013? there are some drug resistant strains making their way around the world in this very infectious disease. it is happening now. make sure you are safe. that's all in the next 59 minutes. simon hobbs is my partner today. he is in for sue. >> let's focus on the economic signs today. the drop took us from record highs, let's not forget. was it the correction that so many people have warned us about? right now, you can see, we are just about to retake on this bounce, it would appear, dow down. s&p, 1513. also higher on oil but we've lost a lot this week. gold, as you can see, 1572. still way below the $1600 level. that market bouncing back clearly, sign number one, for investors heading into the weekend. sign number two comes from europe. european commission very negative on the country's economic prospects for the year. they say you will barely grow for the whole of the 27 nation eu. they will contract again in 2013. sign number three provided by the federal reserve bank of st. louis, jame
how big a risk is it for the u.s. in 2013? there are some drug resistant strains making their way around the world in this very infectious disease. it is happening now. make sure you are safe. that's all in the next 59 minutes. simon hobbs is my partner today. he is in for sue. >> let's focus on the economic signs today. the drop took us from record highs, let's not forget. was it the correction that so many people have warned us about? right now, you can see, we are just about to retake...
102
102
Feb 20, 2013
02/13
by
CNBC
tv
eye 102
favorite 0
quote 0
my stock tonight is u.s. airways. >> i've been waiting for a pullback. i've been waiting for a pullback on this because this group has gotten hot. you're getting the pullback, i'd pull the trigger. bill in arkansas, please, bill? >> caller: boo-yah from the land of opportunity, advance auto parts. >> okay. i like advanced auto parts and i would be a buyer of it. let's go to keith in georgia, please. keith? >> caller: hey, jim, a big low country savannah, georgia, boo-yah to ya. >> wow. what's up? >> caller: i've been looking at coach, do you think it's time to buy on the recent weakness? >> i can't tell you to sell it. it's down too much. maybe buy some and when the yield gets to three, buy the rest. let's use that as a strategy. let's go to fred in montana. fred? >> caller: hey, coach cramer. >> what's up? >> caller: how do we set a projection for zts or other ipos? we really thank you for your help. >> okay. thank you. this is a better ipo than most, the animal health spinoff of pfizer, another one i wanted to wait for a pullback, i'm not going to back
my stock tonight is u.s. airways. >> i've been waiting for a pullback. i've been waiting for a pullback on this because this group has gotten hot. you're getting the pullback, i'd pull the trigger. bill in arkansas, please, bill? >> caller: boo-yah from the land of opportunity, advance auto parts. >> okay. i like advanced auto parts and i would be a buyer of it. let's go to keith in georgia, please. keith? >> caller: hey, jim, a big low country savannah, georgia, boo-yah...